re: Actually a great potting soil.

What it is, is MG soil has slow release chem nutes. If you wanna do organic obviously that wont work anymore. Also it just becomes a bit harder to judge how much extra nutes you can add in since you have those slow release ones in there. Plus since slow release chem nutes are almost always water soluble if the plant gets a lot of watering (aka it rains) it will get over nuted most of the time.

Personally I feel if you cool with it then I am all for it. I just like the idea of organic myself. Just like if I have a choice between organic produce, or chemically grown monsanto shit, I definitely go for all natural. I guess thats why I have started trying to grow a lot of my own veggies n fruits.

re: Actually a great potting soil.

Originally Posted by Jimmycricket

What it is, is MG soil has slow release chem nutes. If you wanna do organic obviously that wont work anymore. Also it just becomes a bit harder to judge how much extra nutes you can add in since you have those slow release ones in there. Plus since slow release chem nutes are almost always water soluble if the plant gets a lot of watering (aka it rains) it will get over nuted most of the time.

Personally I feel if you cool with it then I am all for it. I just like the idea of organic myself. Just like if I have a choice between organic produce, or chemically grown monsanto shit, I definitely go for all natural. I guess thats why I have started trying to grow a lot of my own veggies n fruits.

There is both water-soluble and water-insoluble nitrogen, nitrogen toxicity in an alkaline environment is possible, but for a vegging cannabis plant, IMO, is unlikely. By the time the plant begins to flower, most of the slow release nutes that were found in the MG soil, will have been used up. They only last about 2-3 months. Also, I add an organic fertilizer that contains an 8-5-5 NPK ratio, with more slow-release nitrogen ( for vegging ). Also it has the organic part with added bone meal/meat meal.. it feeds up to 2-3 months...

If an organism soley relied on organic compounds to survive, they would die. The fact is everything needs inorganic metals, and alkali metals to survive. The idea of being "fully organic" is part of a marketing agenda.

re: Actually a great potting soil.

I'm just saying the term "fully organic" is politically spun out of wack. The vital force here, that you speak of, has been spoken of for thousands of years. They believe that living organisms are completely different than non-living things. Also, they believe that the "natural" plant-derived vitamins, flavor compounds, etc. are somehow different, and more healthful than the identical "artificial" synthesized compounds.